T. rex skeleton model in museum hall
Fernbank's new T. rex exhibition opens Saturday. Here's how to plan your visit. — WACN 21 Illustration

Things to do · Family

T. Rex exhibition opens at Fernbank. Here's what to actually see — and skip.

The blockbuster 'T. Rex: The Ultimate Predator' opens Saturday at Fernbank Museum. We walked through the entire exhibit so you don't have to fight the crowds unprepared.

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The blockbuster T. Rex: The Ultimate Predator opens Saturday at Fernbank Museum in the Druid Hills neighborhood. I walked through the entire exhibit Tuesday so you don’t have to fight the first-weekend crowds unprepared.

What to actually see

The juvenile T. rex cast

The single best thing in the show is a life-sized cast of a juvenile T. rex — about 11 feet long, covered in downy feathers. It’s the first time a juvenile has been reconstructed at this size for public viewing, and it does a much better job than the giant adult skeleton of showing what the animal actually looked like.

Why it matters: adult T. rex reconstructions have dominated pop culture for so long that we’ve lost sight of the fact that the animal was agile, fast-growing, and feathered for most of its life. This juvenile is the corrective.

The biomechanics station

A pull-tab interactive that lets you feel the bite force of an adult T. rex versus a juvenile versus an alligator. The alligator is a real-time interactive. The T. rex is a simulation. Both are surprisingly humbling.

The fossil prep lab window

A glass window into Fernbank’s working fossil prep lab, where a team will be working on real specimens throughout the run. Free with admission — the lab work doesn’t require a special ticket.

What to skip

The 4D movie

The 12-minute “immersive” film adds nothing the rest of the exhibit doesn’t already give you, and the ticket is $8 on top of general admission. Skip it unless your kid specifically begs.

The gift-shop-only animatronic at the exit

It’s the loudest thing in the entire museum and it scares every toddler in a 30-foot radius.

How to avoid the crowds

  • Go Tuesday or Wednesday if you can. Saturday opening weekend will be packed.
  • First thing in the morning (doors open at 10 a.m.) is the calmest window.
  • After 3 p.m. weekdays the school-trip crowd thins out.

The basics

  • Where: Fernbank Museum of Natural History, 767 Clifton Rd NE
  • When: Opens Saturday, July 5; runs through January 4, 2027
  • Cost: $28 adults, $26 seniors, $24 kids (ages 3–12), free for Fernbank members
  • Tickets: advance timed-entry strongly recommended

Kira Tomlinson covers Atlanta’s food, arts, and family scene for WACN 21. Reach her at ktomlinson@wacn21.com.